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A Two-Level Architecture for Internet Signaling draft-braden-2level-signal-arch-01.txt

A Two-Level Architecture for Internet Signaling draft-braden-2level-signal-arch-01.txt Bob Braden, Bob Lindell USC Information Sciences Institute IETF 55, Atlanta November 2002. The Signaling Problem Domain. There are many different signaling problems. QoS setup [e.g., RSVP v1]

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A Two-Level Architecture for Internet Signaling draft-braden-2level-signal-arch-01.txt

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  1. A Two-Level Architecture for Internet Signaling draft-braden-2level-signal-arch-01.txt Bob Braden, Bob Lindell USC Information Sciences Institute IETF 55, Atlanta November 2002

  2. The Signaling Problem Domain • There are many different signaling problems. • QoS setup[e.g., RSVP v1] • And all its variations -- E2E vs. proxies, multi-level (inter- vs. intra-domain), mobility (?), telephony (?) • Middlebox configuration(NATs, firewalls,...) [e.g., TIST] • Traffic engineering[e.g., RSVP-TE] • Link Layer & Access Net Control[e.g.,GMPLS-TE, ASON, PacketCable, ...] • Network provisioning(VPNs, Diffserv DSCP, ...) • Important NSIS WG decision: how to structure this space

  3. Motherhood • Want to take an Internet-friendly approach • Robust: cope with heterogeneity and with failure • Fundamentally simple but easily extensible • General: useful for future signaling applications • Common mechanisms • What Can We Learn from RSVP V1? • It has been adapted to a wide variety of signaling problems • That’s also the bad news ... Advanced state of protocol chaos! • Let’s try to do better...

  4. API ULSP3 ULSP2 ULSP1 CSTP Two-Level Architecture Proposal • Define Internet Signaling Protocol Suite (ISPS) • (My choice for a name for the “NSIS protocol”) • ULSP --(generic) Upper-Level Signaling Protocol • CSTP --Common Signaling Transport Protocol • Framework document calls these NSLP, NTLP resp. • CSTP may use IP, UDP, and/or TCP (see later)

  5. Why? (For the same reasons there is a Transport layer in the protocol stack.) • Modularity is a Good Thing • Simplify design of new signaling applications • Independent evolution of signaling applications and the underlying transport mechanism • Key element: CSTP service model and API • Why only two levels? • Can we further modularize the ULSP level? • Good idea, but moving beyond engineering into research here.

  6. Signal msg H-sink H-src ISPS peers (Normally neighbors, but not necessarily) Functional Partition • ULSP implements E-to-E (NI-NR) semantics • CSTP handles peer-peer communication • Payload: Signaling App. Proto. Unit (SAPU) P-src (NI) P-sink (NR) (Data path) Data & signaling path

  7. CSTP Functions • Design goal: general building block for wide range of signaling applications • Proposed CSTP-level functions • Reliable ordered delivery* of (trigger) messages • Soft-state refresh* • Fragment/reasm SAPUs* • Routing interface • Hop/Hop security* • Congestion control • Neighbor discovery and up/down determination (?) * Optional

  8. CSTP Service Model • Send:deliver SAPU and maintain/timeout as soft state • Option: deliver SAPUs reliably and in order [1]. • Tear: (H-src -> H-dest) explicitly remove SAPU state. • Rev-Tear:(H-dst to H-src) delete soft state. [not in I-D] • SendInfo: deliver SAPU (not soft state) Note: [1]: Can reliable delivery option be chosen internally by CSTP on hop/hop basis, rather than chosen by the ULSP?

  9. CSTP Service Model (2) • CSTP service model is subtly different from Request, Release, Notify, Accept, model ... of traditional telephony signaling. • Send roughly analogous to ‘Request’ • Tear, Rev-Tear roughly analogous to ‘Release’ • SendInfo rough analogous to ’Notify’ • But ‘Accept’, ‘Reject’ are higher-level concept -- at ULSP level.

  10. CSTP Protocol • The CSTP protocol(s) proposed in the Draft are incomplete; intended to establish plausibility. • (Move to an Appendix or to another document?) • E.g., Bundling refresh requests requires discussion (RFC 2961) • CSTP was originally designed to provide RSVP-style transport directly over IP • Call this CSTP/IP. • Could alternatively use TCP connections underneath CSTP, to obtain reliable ordered delivery -- CSTP/TCP. • Still need soft state mechanism for deleting unused state.

  11. More Technical Details • Assumed that an SAPU is opaque to the CSTP level. • Strong assumption: e.g., CSTP layer then does not know about flow identification, which may be arbitrarily encoded into SAPU.(cf. RSVP v1 Session, SenderTemplate objects) • Then SAPU level cannot know about previous/next hop per-flow; the ULSP has to maintain this information for a path-coupled signaling operation. • Alternative approach: back off on generality, make standard-encoding of flow identification visible to CSTP. Needs more thought.

  12. ULSP Level • Every ULSP can use its own encoding for its SAPUs. • This flexibility is good, but it would also be good to: • Define a standard encoding format for SAPUs. • The RSVP packet format -- small fixed header + sequence of typed data objects -- has worked well. • Could define a concrete API to CSTP • To enable 3rd-party ULSP software

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